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    This article refers to physical states having the same energy. For other uses of the word degeneracy, see degeneracy (disambiguation).

    In physics two or more physical states are said to be degenerate if they are both at the same energy level; the energy level is said to be degenerate if it contains two or more such states. The number of occupation states available at a particular energy level is called the level's degeneracy.

    In quantum theory, this usually pertains to electronic configurations and the electron energy levels, where different possible occupation states for particles may be related by symmetry. The usage comes from the fact that degenerate eigenstates correspond to identical eigenvalues of the Hamiltonian. Since eigenvalues correspond to roots of the characteristic equation, degeneracy here has the same meaning as the common mathematical usage of the word.

    If the symmetry is broken by a perturbation, such as applying an external electric field, this can change the energies of the states, causing energy level splitting.


        Degenerate energy level
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    This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License [copyleft]. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Degenerate energy level". link